For some forms of advertising, a high ad frequency is considered a good thing.

Try watching any sports game on network TV. Unless it’s the Super Bowl, you’re likely to see the same commercial over and over again throughout the broadcast.

But think about the last time you saw the same commercial for the tenth time in two hours. It’s not an endearing experience. In fact, it’s annoying. If you could tell your TV to stop showing you that commercial, you probably would.

That’s exactly why a high ad frequency on Facebook isn’t necessarily a good thing. Facebook ads are interactive. People can hide ads they don’t want to see any more. And when that happens, Facebook starts showing your ad to fewer people.

So managing your ad frequency is an important part of ensuring your Facebook ads get maximum exposure.

To learn more about Facebook ad frequency, we surveyed 28 marketers to gather their thoughts on things like the ideal number of times for one person to see your Facebook ad and tactics for keeping your ad frequency low.

Here’s what we learned.

Why is Facebook Ad Frequency Important?

For the most part, our respondents feel like ad frequency is an important metric to track. 69% pay either some or a lot of attention to their frequency metrics on Facebook:

And most feel like ad frequency is important to the overall success of their Facebook ad campaigns:

So why is ad frequency an important metric to measure?

One reason is that your relevance score is crucial to the performance of your Facebook ads. As Rajat Chauhan of Techtic Solutions explains: “When people engage with your ad, your relevance score goes up. And if your relevance score is high, your ad is more likely to be served than other ads targeting the same audience.”

But when people see your ad over and over again and don’t act on it, your relevance score declines.

“If your frequency is north of five from the outset of a campaign, this would suggest that either your targeted audience is wrong and the core message isn’t resonating or that your audience is too small and the same people are seeing the ad. Plus, as your frequency climbs, your CPA will naturally increase,” Burrows says.

AdEspresso’s Tory Wenger offers some data to back that up: “We analyzed over 500 campaigns and found that ads with a frequency of nine had a CPC that was 161.7% more expensive than ads with a frequency of one.”

So what’s an ideal number of times to show an ad to the same person? Two-thirds of our respondents said 3-8 times is the sweet spot:

If you’re currently serving your ads to the same people many more times than recommended, there’s no need to worry. Our respondents offered 15 tips you can start taking advantage of immediately to lower the number of times your target audience is seeing your Facebook ads.

1. Set Up Frequency Rules

The simplest way to ensure your frequency doesn’t get too high is to set up frequency rules when creating your campaigns.

“I set up a rule to stop showing the ad when the frequency hits two,” says James Pollard of The Advisor Coach. “In almost every ad I’ve ever run, costs begin to creep up once the frequency hits two.”

“My thinking is: if someone hasn’t clicked your ad after being shown it multiple times, will they click it if you keep showing it? I don’t think so, which is why I would much rather turn off the ad and create a new one,” Pollard says.

But if you don’t want to turn your ads completely off, RUNNER Agency’s Brad Ehney says you can also “set up rules to notify you when your ad hits the frequency you’re looking to achieve.” That way, you can review the ad’s performance and make a decision as to whether to turn it off or not.

Or you can manage your frequency by taking the advice of Growth Hackers’ Jonathan Aufray and “select a frequency of one per day. Unfortunately, there’s no magic button you can just click to say ‘show this ad a maximum of # times to the same person.’”

Anastasia Sul’zhyk of SmartyAds recommends a similar approach to Aufray but says to “limit the number of time people see the ad to once every seven days.”

Editor’s note: If you want a quick way to view your ad frequency and monitor your overall Facebook ad campaign performance, download this free Facebook Ads Campaign Performance dashboard to see all of your most important metrics in one centralized view.

2. Know Who You’re Targeting

Websavvy’s Trevor Henselwood says that “the best tactic for managing frequency is understanding the relationship between the targeted audience and your brand or business. That relationship lets you know how hard you can push or if you need to have a more delicate touch.”

“For colder audiences, go hard. For an email list of past purchasers, you might want to reduce budgets and keep the messages relevant to their needs.”

“Frequency is all about understanding who needs to see what.”

3. Create Custom Audiences

“Create multiple custom audiences and map when you add a potential customer to each and when you remove them, then work that process,” says Kurt Uhlir of Showcase IDX.

“As prospects choose to discover more about your offering, you need to meet them where they are with a message that helps them be more of who they are.”

“You can easily do this by using the Facebook Pixel and custom audiences from Facebook engagement to provide potential clients exactly what they need,” Uhlir says.

Zach Greenberger of adMixt recommends a similar approach: “The best way to avoid flooding your customers with ads is to exclude site visitors and purchasers using website custom audiences. Target those users separately with smaller budgets to effectively message each stage of your funnel.”

4. Exclude Irrelevant Audiences

“One of the most common frequency mistakes is targeting people who have already accomplished your campaign’s goal,” says Andreea Popa of Search Scientists. “Make sure to exclude people who no longer need to receive that particular message.”

“For example, if you’re advertising a content promotion with the goal of reaching new readers, exclude people who have already visited your website or blog. If you’re advertising a bottom-of-the-funnel message with the goal of converting people, exclude people who have already bought from you.”

5. Stop Targeting Uninterested People

“In reality, a potential customer shouldn’t be seeing the same advertisement more than twice,” says Lightbulb Media’s Lewis Kemp.

“If they’ve engaged with the ad already, then you should be showing them the next step in the customer journey. If they haven’t, you need to split test your creative and copy until they do. If they still aren’t engaging after that, you’re targeting the wrong people.”

6. Target Existing Leads

“Whenever I run Facebook ads, I use lead scoring and tools like ActiveCampaign to segment my audience and identify who is worth doubling down on with ad spend,” says Empathy First Media’s Daniel Lynch.

“If you can identify people who have come to your website multiple times but haven’t converted, you should keep hammering them with ads until you have them on the phone to determine if they are sales-qualified,” Lynch says.

9. Pick the Right Placement

“One effective tactic for managing your Facebook ad frequency is the placement of your ad,” says Andrew Ruditser of MAXBURST. “It’s important that your ad is shown in a spot where it is noticeable but not an annoyance to the user.”

“If your ad is shown in the middle of a user’s news feed, then it might get a negative response. These ads tend to annoy the user as it interferes with scrolling.”

“Showing your ad on the side will get a more positive response. This is because the user can still notice the ad and respond if interested, but it will not interfere with the user’s routine.”

10. Run Shorter, More Memorable Campaigns

Expertsure’s Ollie Smith says it’s “a great idea is to run short campaigns to a select group of people. I learned that running shorter campaigns enables me to manage frequency better and almost completely mitigate my frequency issues.”

“Your ad needs to be memorable, whether it be by the imagery/video used or something notable in the copy of the ad,” says Aston Social’s Ellen Roumeliotis. “If your ad is memorable, you can get away with a reduced frequency.”

“Avoid running the same ad for more than one week. It will run dry otherwise,” Roumeliotis says.

11. Adjust Your Budget

Clarity Coverdale Fury’s Andy Brunn says the best way to manage your ad frequency is to “budget effectively based on audience universe size, effective frequency, and duration.”

Max Reinhardt of Beacons Point recommends “manipulating your budget to ensure prospecting campaigns are not reaching a frequency over two and retargeting campaigns are not over 7-8.”

“The only surefire way to cap ad frequency in Facebook is to run a Daily Unique Reach campaign, which is the only campaign type that allows you to directly control frequency,” says Bright Oak’s Nery Solano.

“Matching budget to audience size is the second best way to control ad frequency. You don’t want to target 500 people with $100 per-day budget because you will oversaturate your audience,” Solano says.

“As Facebook will move your budget around to the different ad sets/audiences based on performance, it’s almost a built-in way to keep audiences fatigue from becoming a problem. I was able to utilize this feature for a large law firm to drive leads for 84% less than the industry average.”

13. Manage Your Ad Variations

“If you have just one ad in place, more people will see that same ad more often, which will result in lower click rates and conversions and higher CPM costs,” says A1 Future Technologies’ Srish Agrawal. “By running a wide range of ad copy and campaigns, you should be able to better manage your Facebook Ad frequency.”

Yvonne Hall of HIVE Digital Strategy agrees: “By monitoring your Facebook ad campaigns frequently, you will begin to see which ad variations are working and which ads people are seeing too frequently. Then, you can adjust and create similar or new ads in order to stay fresh while reaching your target market.”

“Creating a campaign and just sticking with your original ads throughout the campaign will likely result in the same people seeing your ads too frequently and not engaging with them. People will start to tune your ads out if you don’t keep them fresh,” Hall says.

14. Use Dynamic Creatives

If you don’t want to create multiple ads, Jess Riches of Enriches Business recommends using dynamic creatives.

“The trick to managing frequency is to manage the campaign at the creative level. If you’re serving ads to the right audience, seeing your business name over and over is not an issue. But seeing the same creative over and over can be.”

“Swap the creative, use dynamic creative, and play with headlines and copy. Test short over long form, and replace brightly colored ads for black and white with sharp contrast. Keep them entertained and engaged with you.”

15. Use Evergreen Retargeting Techniques

“A common frequency issue arises with retargeting campaigns,” says AdEspresso’s Paul Fairbrother. “It’s very common to see advertisers put all their warm audiences into the same campaign and show the same ads over and over.”

“Thankfully, we can use evergreen retargeting techniques to prevent this problem. If you’re not familiar with the term ‘evergreen,’ it means something fresh and new for the audience’s eyes—which is our goal here.”

“The main benefit of this setup is that the audience will dynamically update and move through a sequence of different campaigns, ensuring they will see new ads over time. Not only that, but you can even leave this sequence on for months or even years, with some tiny maintenance touches from time to time.”

Stay on Top of Your Ads to Better Manage Your Frequency

The most important thing to avoid to prevent a too-high ad frequency is taking a set-it-and-forget-it approach. If you never take the time to monitor your frequency and you never refresh your ads or your audience, a high frequency is inevitable.

As Social Factor’s Claudia Lopez says, “The best approach to managing Facebook ad frequency is staying ahead of your ads and planning accordingly.”

About the author

Jessica Greene writes about marketing, business, and technology for B2B SaaS companies. A former writing instructor and corporate marketer, she uses her subject-matter expertise and desire to educate others as motivation for developing actionable, in-depth, user-focused content.